Alright so a lot of the people on this forum that complain about trials struggle with PvP skill. I have a few methods that brought me from a negative KD player to top 500 and a 2.0+ in all seasonal playlists. Keep in mind, you don’t need to play all of these restrictions, these just helped me when I was trying to improve initially. If anyone else has any ideas that have given them results comment them.
Play rumble:
-The playlist helps with game awareness and gun skill if you play fast. You have to keep track of all of the people around you to avoid being third partied, and have to execute your kills quickly to win the game. Dying punishes you in this game-mode and the fast/awkward gunfights that FFA game-modes give you will help fix up your aim.
Stay away from the trials cheese class builds:
-Don’t let them kid you, running around invisible with a slug or with stasis isn’t a fun counter to apes and handcannons. They’re builds that negate gun skill. If you’re trying to improve, you want to use things that challenge you as a player, not load outs that do the work for you. Avoid perks that are always giving you free health regen (wormhusk, OEM) and damaging/weakening your opponents for free (Arcsouls, stasis turrets.)
The weapons you use:
-People are going to get mad at me for this one but, stay away from using bows, sidearms, fusions, ARs/SMGs, GLs and exotic HCs at first. Things like Ace, main ingredient, the bow swap combo, and smgs do not take a whole lot of gun skill to use. I added ARS to that list because they encourage pre firing and spraying are corners which won’t help train your reactions. Also, avoid getting too used to weapons like slugs. They’re really good right now, but don’t really fit into the sandbox well and will likely get nerfed. It will be hard to play as well when bungie brings them in. Some of my friends had the same issue after the revolker nerf.
Stick to lower AA handcannons, pulse rifles, snipers and PELLET shotguns to improve your gun skill. These weapons are the most aim oriented weapons available, and really punish you for missing or miss placing shots.
Another thing about the weapons, I have found that taking off the targeting mods on your helmet also helps when trying to train aim. Those targeting mods help with accuracy yes, but they give you an AA bump. Playing with the lower AA will also help you get better at aiming weapons in D2.
Lastly, welcome the opportunity to play better players. Being punished for bad moves is a good thing. Playing the top 2%-3%+ is ideal, the gun skill isn’t too crazy but they nail you for playing badly for the most part.
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68 OdpowiedziEdytowany przez użytkownika Rogue: 12/2/2021 1:52:02 AMHonesty man, most of what you’ve written would result in the average person having worse performance. Rumble is not a team game, and teaches you to play selfishly. Behaviour you’ll have to unlearn later. Not using “easy builds” in order to “challenge yourself” is actually just “throwing.” Telling people to use lower AA canons when the higher AA ones are generally meta, is just weird. And targeting mods? Really? These are ubiquitous with pvp 🤷 Oh, and all the weapons you don’t like require no skill? How original, never heard that one before. Saying smg’s don’t require “gun skill” is laughable. Tracking aim is actually notoriously difficult to develop, anyone who can do it should 100% take advantage of it. Tracking aim is also perfectly suited to work well with controller sticky aim. Edit; I won’t just disagree with you and leave myself covered, I’ll throw my two cents in for fairness. [b]If you are just starting out in pvp[/b] a smart move may be to start out with your favourite and most comfortable PVE load out. You likely already know how those guns feel, their perks and ranges. From there, you’ll develop a starting point to understand what you’re lacking and what you need, and can tailor a pvp build directly to yourself. Once you have a pvp build that makes sense to you, gear up completely in your pvp kit, and take it into strikes. Practice playing flawlessly. Treat the AI like guardians, pretend they can kill you in 1 second. Use cover, live your load out. Most pvp builds are not well optimised for PVE, and this IMO is a better way to “challenge yourself” to improve your own performance. Once you have a build you are comfortable with and can play well, you have a solid foundation to build on. The rest comes from experience, and there aren’t any shortcuts for that, other than consistently giving 100%. You want to intentionally give every encounter in pvp your all, leave it all on the field, play to win, and in losing games, play even harder. You have a KD to defend. <3